Western Daily Press

Plans unveiled for 880 homes and cinema

- TRISTAN CORK tristan.cork@reachplc.com

ABRISTOL shopping centre could be demolished to make way for up to 880 new flats, a two-screen cinema, library and new shopping streets.

Developers have offered their first official submission to council planners for their vision to transform the Broadwalk Shopping Centre in the heart of Knowle into Redcatch Quarter with 12-storey blocks of flats either side of a new pedestrian­ised street lined with shops, restaurant­s and bars.

The proposals were revealed in January, and since then the developers have conducted a consultati­on and an exhibition of what they want to do to the landmark 1970s shopping centre on the junction of Wells Road and Broad Walk in Knowle.

Now the developers have made their first submission to Bristol City Council’s planning department, asking whether they need to include an environmen­tal assessment when they do eventually submit a formal planning applicatio­n.

And it reveals for the first time officially the scale of the developmen­t, which will occupy almost all the space between the Wells Road and Redcatch Park.

The developers said the site could have up to 880 residentia­l dwellings; 7,430sqm of commercial floorspace; 190 sqm of community use; a 320sqm library, which would replace the library that’s in the existing Broadwalk Shopping Centre; and 870 sqm given over to a cinema or theatre.

On top of that, the developers say the site will include 360 car parking spaces, mainly in an undergroun­d car park underneath the developmen­t, and cycle parking for a total of 1,455 bikes.

The developmen­t would create new streets. One would be a pedestrian­ised street going from Wells Road to a new entrance to Redcatch Park, and a second would be a service road for the developmen­t which would cut across north-south from Redcatch Road almost to Broad Walk.

The site already has planning permission for the shopping centre to be demolished and rebuilt with hundreds of flats. Before the pandemic, developers submitted a plan for 420 new flats and shops – again 12-storeys high – which was eventually given permission by council planners last year.

But the site changed hands and the new developers said the pandemic meant a change in shopping habits, so a new plan with more homes and less space for shops was needed.

The developers said they hope to submit a formal planning applicatio­n for the new project this summer.

The artist’s impression­s of the site reveal the 12-storey block of flats in one drawing would be located at the south-western corner of the developmen­t site, closest to Redcatch Park on Broad Walk road itself, while the other residentia­l blocks would be around six to nine storeys high.

If the developmen­t does end up having a cinema, in the long term it could be the only one in South Bristol, after planning permission was given last year for the Hengrove Leisure Park to be cleared – including the Cineworld multiplex there – for more than 300 new homes.

 ?? Redcatch Quarter ?? An artist’s impression of how the site could look; below, Broadwalk Shopping Centre
Redcatch Quarter An artist’s impression of how the site could look; below, Broadwalk Shopping Centre
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